Most of them are generic, congratulating the 57-year-old journalist on her successful move and standing up for pay equality.

Others however, were a little more pointed.

THE GOLDEN TEMPTATION

Lisa Wilkinson announced her shock exit from the Today show on Monday night after co-hosting the program for 10 years alongside Karl Stefanovic.

In an even more shocking move, it only took Wilkinson 45 minutes to confirm she'd already landed another TV gig with Network Ten's prime time news show The Project, alongside the likes of Carrie Bickmore and Waleed Aly.

And while Wilkinson's number one reason for leaving Today came down to their unwillingness to meet her offer, new reports claim the veteran star could have a Gold Logie in her sights.

Both Aly and Bickmore have won the Gold Logie in the past. Stefanovic won the coveted golden TV award in 2011.

Wilkinson however, is yet to even receive a nomination.

According to the Herald Sun, Nine tried to assure Wilkinson they would set up a taskforce to make sure she nabbed Australian TV's highest award in 2018 but it was clearly too little, too late for her.

"I'm Lisa Wilkinson ... and I'm from nowhere," she began, to laughter and cheers at the Opera House.

Wilkinson was all smiles as she sipped champagne and joked "I'm tasting success".

She took one final opportunity to riff about her big move in her opening speech.

"Moet & Chandon is synonymous with royal jubilees, coronations, celebrations … and new job opportunities," she said.

"Sorry, I couldn't help myself."

Wilkinson's shock defection to Ten is rumoured to have made her one of the highest paid women in Australian television, but on Friday she played down her career move joking she was "kind of unemployed".

"I'm not an official Moet and Chandon employee ... even though I'm kind of unemployed," she said.

“Tasting success”.

It is understood Nine offered Wilkinson $1.8 million a year, a $700,000 increase from her $1.1 million salary but $500,000 less than the $2.3 million she had asked for and the number Stefanovic is reportedly on.

Wilkinson's move to Ten marked the start of a nightmare PR week for Channel Nine after her shock exit was compounded with news Nine had axed founding host Paul Vautin from the long-running NRL Footy Show.

Then Nine CEO Hugh Marks - himself the recent beneficiary of a pay rise which saw him take home $2.77 million last financial year, despite Nine's $203 million annual loss - took the unprecedented step of outlining publicly why he thought Stefanovic was worth more than Wilkinson. Complete with dollar figures.